Melting jolly ranchers??

I have read in several places that jolly ranchers can be melted and poured into a mold. I want to make several "jewels" for decorating a cake. I have the mold and the jolly ranchers... Now I need to know, how do I melt the jolly ranchers? Microwave? Stove top? Do I need a special pan? Can I pour it directly into the plastic mold? Won't it be too hot? So many questions... I hope someone has some answers.

smash them up into as close to dust as possible. (hammer works well, rolling pin works well, cast iron skillet works well --- and hard head children's heads work well -- just kidding on that last one!)

put in regular high sides saucepan

then add several tablespoonfuls of water and stir will -- it should be fully wet w/ some water still showing.

turn up the heat---and stir gentlyhelps to have wet brush to brush down inside walls of pan as it reaches boil.

USING a candy thermometer -- bring to hard crack stage for hardest candy when cast (the same as used to make lolli-pops and jolly-ranchers)

WARNING -- this is near 300 degrees!!!!! VERY DANGEROUS if mishandled... SEVERE BURNS -- 2nd degree!!!! easily possible -- if it gets on skin!!!!

You can also melt them in the oven but you need some kind of barrier, shaped like the jewels.

I know that cookie dough is one, I've seen those jeweled cookies they make.

I'm wondering if you could use dough to shape the jewels and then sprinkle the smashed JR in the middle? Would it act like a barrier and then allow you to remove the baked dough so you have the jewel shape left? What would happen if you piped Royal icing into the shape you needed and then filled the middle with the candy?

spelllose weightfind the fountain of youthfix anything under the hood -- or nearly anywhere in or on a car or any othre machine (tho' VERY good at breaking them)do math beyond what requires fingers and toes unless using Excelduststop getting olderfind the secret to winning the lotterydancepick a paint color other than beigeplay any instrument with more than one finger at a time (singer here -- but only w/ music & conductor in front of me!)grow anything more complicated than crabgrass and weedsand there are many more things on the list.

food has been a facination since I was young (end result -- don't know how #2 above) -- and my mom was a wonderful teacher of how to make all kinds of things -- how many kids have made home-pulled taffy -- I have! or homemade egg noodle -- I have....(get the drift?) so my knowledge of making hard candys (and the OWWWWWWWCH!!!! too) are first hand from youth.

You can also melt them in the oven but you need some kind of barrier, shaped like the jewels.

I know that cookie dough is one, I've seen those jeweled cookies they make.

I'm wondering if you could use dough to shape the jewels and then sprinkle the smashed JR in the middle? Would it act like a barrier and then allow you to remove the baked dough so you have the jewel shape left? What would happen if you piped Royal icing into the shape you needed and then filled the middle with the candy?

Of course the jewel would be flat and not faceted.

I'm thinking outloud here and am probably making no sense at all.

having made stained glass cookies many times (fav. at Christmas) the sugar and the dough tend to meld at the joint and you could never get a clean edge.

royal would just melt too...after all have to take to 350 to get sugar to melt without water -- and royal is just sugar and egg whites (which would probably burn at that point)

possible solution (i haven't tried this yet)

use aluminum foil to press into molds to get mold shape.

then support in bed of corn starch or flour (which will brown at oven temp) and then put crushed jolly ranchers or even colored sanding sugar in the foil molds and bake at 350 until melted.

I sold Pampered Chef for awhile and we had to do demos around christmas working with Jolly Ranchers. I just droped them into a high sided pan and and let them set, no stiring-I learned this the hard way! Once they were melted, I poured them into a greased stone mold and let them set. I guess cooking them whole takes so long they pretty high on the temp., but I never checked. Those were neat, I need to do more of those!

I just did this and it worked great!!! -Heat you oven to 350.-Put Jolly Ranchers into a mini food processor and grind until powder.-Line a cookie sheet with foil. Spray foil w/ a thin layer of non-stick cooking spray.-Spray metal cookie cutters w/ non-stick cooking spray and place on cookie sheet.-Fill cookie cutters with ground up Jolly ranchers and bake for 5 - 10 mins.The Jolly Ranchers will stay inside of the molds!!! Very easy and looks great!!!

smash them up into as close to dust as possible. (hammer works well, rolling pin works well, cast iron skillet works well --- and hard head children's heads work well -- just kidding on that last one!)

put in regular high sides saucepan

then add several tablespoonfuls of water and stir will -- it should be fully wet w/ some water still showing.

turn up the heat---and stir gentlyhelps to have wet brush to brush down inside walls of pan as it reaches boil.

USING a candy thermometer -- bring to hard crack stage for hardest candy when cast (the same as used to make lolli-pops and jolly-ranchers)

WARNING -- this is near 300 degrees!!!!! VERY DANGEROUS if mishandled...

smash them up into as close to dust as possible. (hammer works well, rolling pin works well, cast iron skillet works well --- and hard head children's heads work well -- just kidding on that last one!)

put in regular high sides saucepan

then add several tablespoonfuls of water and stir will -- it should be fully wet w/ some water still showing.

turn up the heat---and stir gentlyhelps to have wet brush to brush down inside walls of pan as it reaches boil.

USING a candy thermometer -- bring to hard crack stage for hardest candy when cast (the same as used to make lolli-pops and jolly-ranchers)

WARNING -- this is near 300 degrees!!!!! VERY DANGEROUS if mishandled... SEVERE BURNS -- 2nd degree!!!! easily possible -- if it gets on skin!!!!

then pour into molds made for this kind of high heat work.

regular chocolate molds won't take it.

Sorry...first post was on my ipad...still not used to that thing!

Can u use the melted candy to dip apples in? I normally make my own candy to dip the apples in but Thought about using the jolly ranchers to add some flavor

spelllose weightfind the fountain of youthfix anything under the hood -- or nearly anywhere in or on a car or any othre machine (tho' VERY good at breaking them)do math beyond what requires fingers and toes unless using Excelduststop getting olderfind the secret to winning the lotterydancepick a paint color other than beigeplay any instrument with more than one finger at a time (singer here -- but only w/ music & conductor in front of me!)grow anything more complicated than crabgrass and weedsand there are many more things on the list.

food has been a facination since I was young (end result -- don't know how #2 above) -- and my mom was a wonderful teacher of how to make all kinds of things -- how many kids have made home-pulled taffy -- I have! or homemade egg noodle -- I have....(get the drift?) so my knowledge of making hard candys (and the OWWWWWWWCH!!!! too) are first hand from youth.[/quote]

This is funny I thought that I was the only mom that taught my kids to cook in the kitchen with everythng... I presently have 2 sons that love to cook (Not bakers) but chefs and they love it.. kodos to your mom

I just did this and it worked great!!! -Heat you oven to 350.-Put Jolly Ranchers into a mini food processor and grind until powder.-Line a cookie sheet with foil. Spray foil w/ a thin layer of non-stick cooking spray.-Spray metal cookie cutters w/ non-stick cooking spray and place on cookie sheet.-Fill cookie cutters with ground up Jolly ranchers and bake for 5 - 10 mins.The Jolly Ranchers will stay inside of the molds!!! Very easy and looks great!!!

I have tried doing this but they still stuck to the foil when I let them cool and set on the foil. If I try moving them before they are set they run and loose the shape. What am I doing wrong?

I have melted Jolly Ranchers before just as Doug described and poured over small crushed chunks of ice for candy coral. I also put them in molds and it works great as long as you don't overcook or burn them! Then they taste awful.